By Reuben Abati
December 11, 2004
Guardian
Audu
Ogbeh, former college lecturer, playwright, former Federal Minister and an old
friend of the President, who also happens to be the Chairman of the ruling
Peoples Democratic Party (PDP) is on collision course with the President. He
has leaked to the Punch of Saturday, December 11, (or maybe someone else did so
on his behalf) a very embarrassing letter, which says a lot that is damaging
and ominous about the Obasanjo administration.
The letter vindicates
those of us in civil society who have spent so much energy trying to warn this
government about the dangers of wielding power with excessive arrogance.
For Audu Ogbeh to put his pen to paper, is an expression
of complete frustration.
The leakage of the letter to the
press places him in a position of strength: he has succeeded in placing his
fears on public record. He has openly distanced himself from the Obasanjo
administration. He is asking the public to note that when the Obasanjo
government began to drift, he was not one of the architects of the descent.
He has also managed to
say in his letter that Obasanjo is the problem with Nigeria, and that he alone
can solve the problems that have arisen. In other words, Audu Ogbeh is passing
a vote of no confidence in President Obasanjo, as Chairman of the President's
party, he is telling us that Obasanjo is on his own, and that he is not in any
away implementing the party's agenda. Truly, there are serious problems in the
PDP.
It is a party that is divided
against itself. Now that party members and chieftains are beginning to
criticise President Obasanjo and distance themselves from him, the clear
indication is that the implosion within the PDP which many had predicted would
occur in 2005 with telling impact, has already begun. It is worth noting that
the same day that The Punch newspaper published Audu Ogbeh's letter, Tim
Menakaya, Obasanjo's first Minister of Health and also a member of the PDP
granted an interview to ThisDay newspaper in which he is quoted as saying
"one on one, I will tell Obasanjo he has failed". Menakaya, one of
those beneficiaries of the Obasanjo administration, now turning against the
man, did not bother to make his point one on one.
He has told the whole world on the
pages of a newspaper that Obasanjo has failed. Let no one pretend that this
kind of insider testimony lacks weight. In due course, Obasanjo's spokesmen or
even the President himself would reply Audu Ogbeh. He would be called names
after a fashion. When Wole Soyinka wrote a similar letter to President
Obasanjo, he got a reply which the newspapers published until Soyinka wrote yet
another stinker to which the President could not find a response. When Chinua
Achebe also wrote a letter to the President recently, he was asked to shut up.
Audu Ogbeh should be prepared for a
lot more fire. His letter is constructed in form of an advice; he must know
that he is dealing with a president who has since declared that he is not under
any obligation to accept anybody's advice including observations by his own
official advisers who are paid to do just that. The weight of Audu Ogbeh's
letter is in the sub-text; the letter writer says a lot by not saying much, but
the significance of his gesture is obvious enough. The Punch which must be
congratulating itself for scooping other newspapers, tried to put its own spin
on Ogbeh's letter by simply highlighting the content, but nonetheless, a
deconstruction of the letter is in order.
Titled "Anambra and Related
Matters", Ogbeh's entry point is the Anambra crisis, and the failure of
the Obasanjo government and the PDP to contain the spread of anarchy. As party
Chairman, Ogbeh was involved in the early attempts to find a solution to the
crisis. So deep must be the confusion within the party that the Chairman has
moved from being a peacemaker, to a critic. But he merely hides under Anambra
to make more general statements of a damning import.
He asks: "The question now is,
what would be the consequences of such a development? How do we exonerate
ourselves from culpability, and worse still, how do we hope to survive it? Mr
President, I was part of the second republic and we fell. Memories of that fall
are a miserable litany of woes we suffered, escaping death only by God's
supreme mercy. Then we were suspected to have stolen all of Nigeria's wealth.
After several months in prison, some of us were freed to come back to life
penniless and wretched. Many have gone to their early graves un-mourned because
the public saw all of us as renegades." Now, he makes his point as
follows: "I am afraid we are drifting in the same direction again. In
life, perception is reality and today, we are perceived in the worst light by
an angry, scornful Nigerian public for reasons which are absolutely
unnecessary."
Every word above is like a stone thrown in Obasanjo's face. By comparing the Obasanjo government to the NPN-led Shagari government of the Second Republic, Ogbeh is saying that things are really bad with Nigeria. The NPN ran an irresponsible government populated by egomaniacs and kleptomaniacs. This was the season of the squandering of Nigerian riches, and the people were very angry with the Shagari government.
Every word above is like a stone thrown in Obasanjo's face. By comparing the Obasanjo government to the NPN-led Shagari government of the Second Republic, Ogbeh is saying that things are really bad with Nigeria. The NPN ran an irresponsible government populated by egomaniacs and kleptomaniacs. This was the season of the squandering of Nigerian riches, and the people were very angry with the Shagari government.
Elections were rigged; party thugs
became overlords, and the government refused to listen to wiser entreaties.
Ogbeh says Nigerians perceive the Obasanjo government in a similar light, and
that the people are angry and scornful.
Ogbeh is a student of literature.
The message of literature is embodied. It is codified. Ogbeh has declared, and
we have no cause to doubt him, that the Obasanjo government is as corrupt and
as irresponsible as the government of the Second Republic. The irony is that
certain key members of that Second Republic may even insist that the NPN did a better
job, that in fact the Second Republic was a lot better.
No less a person than Joseph Wayas,
Senate President in the Second Republic is on record as having said this much
when he lamented that he presided over a far more hardworking and responsive National
Assembly. And he is right. Shehu Shagari was a sober and innocent President,
with a dignified mien.
Ogbeh avers that the Obsanjo
government is attracting public anger for reasons that are "absolutely
unnecessary". It is absolutely unnecessary for example for government to
wage war against the people. The politics that this government plays with the
prices of petroleum products is nothing short of an assault on the people. In
Anambra, the people are holding the President and the PDP responsible for the
chaos in the area, because they insist that if the election in that state had
not been rigged in 2003, there would have been peace and not the kind of
madness that is being witnessed.
The war that the Federal Government
has just fought and lost against the Federal Government over the creation of
and allocation of revenue to local councils is also absolutely unnecessary. The
Supreme Court judgement in the case is an indictment of both the President and
his legal advisers. In another country, the President would tender an apology
to the Lagos State Government.
But instead of eating the humble
pie, the Federal Government has been boasting that its position has been
vindicated by the Supreme Court. What has been vindicated is not so clear. And
it is because of this kind of unnecessary barefaced lying that the people are
angry and distrustful of government.
Again, consider the
President's sudden acceptance that there should be a national dialogue. It is
absolutely unnecessary that he had to spend five years to get to this point.
The committee that he has even set up is made up of government officials and
appointees, and one or two outsiders, conveying the impression that this is not
even something that the President intends to be serious about. The list of omissions
and commissions is endless.
Ogbeh is afraid that as was the case
in the Second Republic, many of the key actors in the present dispensation may
end up in detention. He is worried that the Obasanjo government may fall. And
he is not alone in this thinking. So he adds: "Mr President, if I write in
this vein, it is because I am deeply troubled (all of us are) and I can tell
you that an overwhelming percentage of our party members feel the same way
though many may never be able to say this to you for a variety of
reasons".
In other words, members of the PDP
are also angry and unhappy with the performance of the Obasanjo government. But
they cannot say so because they are either afraid or they are vulnerable or
they are sycophants who are more interested in lining their pockets. Ogbeh opts
to speak on behalf of this silent majority.
And it is remarkable that in this
part of the letter, Ogbeh switches from the use of collective pronouns, to
personal pronouns. He places the problem at Obasanjo's doorstep, with the
advice that the President should do something to stop the drift because
"we can either by omission or commission allow ourselves to crash and
bring to early grief, this beautiful edifice called democracy".
The use of the word beautiful to
qualify democracy should be underlined. Democracy is beautiful but the problem
is with its Nigerian managers. Ogbeh reserves the hardest punch for the last
paragraph. He tells us that he is writing "on behalf of the Peoples
Democratic Party". Is Obasanjo so mixed up that even his own party has to
adopt special tactics to communicate with him? Hear Ogbeh: "On behalf of
the Peoples Democratic Party, I call on you to act now and bring any, and all
criminal, even treasonable activity to a halt. You and you alone have the means.
Do not hesitate. We do not have too much time to waste." The use of the
phrase criminal and treasonable activity should also be underlined.
Ogbeh's letter is a sad commentary
on the Obasanjo government. It is the kind of letter that should have been written
by the Chairman of an opposition party. But this is Obasanjo's own party
accusing him of condoning criminal and treasonable activities, failing to act,
offending the electorate, endangering democracy and moving the country on a
path of destruction. These are very serious charges. It would be interesting to
see how President Obasanjo responds, the kind of defence that he offers.
Whatever happens, it should be remembered that Ogbeh speaks not just his own
mind or the mind of many in the PDP but the mind of the majority of Nigerians.
In a recent newspaper interview, Alhaji Lateef
Jakande only grudgingly gave the Obasanjo government a failure mark of 30 per
cent, and he said he did this just because of the GSM revolution, the credit
for which is not entirely Obasanjo's.
The writing of the history of
Obasanjo's second coming as Nigeria's Head of State has begun. The pity is that
it is starting rather early. The meaning of this kind of situation is that the
people have already given up on the government so they are already composing
its obituary. The sad news is that President Obasanjo would spend the immediate
future, outside Abuja trying to explain himself and his government. Such an
explanation would have been "absolutely unnecessary" if the circumstances
were happier.
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